A chilling piece of science fiction projects the future of our most frightening tech-law trends: what will the mission-creep for memory erasure look like?
Stop the Music
By Charles Duan
I.
comes now plaintiff, Eugene L. Whitman, by and through his
attorneys, and bringing a complaint against Alfred Vail Enterprises,
Inc., states:
1. Plaintiff Whitman is a songwriter and composer of the popular
song 'Taking It Back.'
2. On January 14, 2044, Defendant Vail Enterprises first
distributed the now-hit song 'Straight Focus.'
3. 'Straight Focus' includes an eight-note sample from 'Taking It
Back.' Vail Enterprises accordingly infringed Whitman's copyright by
making an unauthorized derivative work.
Wherefore, Whitman prays for judgment against Vail Enterprises
as follows:
A. A permanent injunction prohibiting Vail Enterprises from
continuing to infringe Whitman's copyright;
B. Destruction of all copies of 'Straight Focus' in Vail Enterprises'
possession; and
C. An order requiring Vail Enterprises to erase the song 'Straight
Focus' from the memories of all persons residing in the United
States.
II.
Defendant Alfred Vail Enterprises, Inc., answers the Complaint of
Plaintiff Eugene L. Whitman as follows:
1. Vail Enterprises is a corporation of the State of Delaware, with
headquarters in Los Angeles, California, and is wholly owned by Alfred
Vail.
2. After a long and successful career in the neurobioengineering
industry, Mr. Vail decided to enter the field of music. His first
composition, 'Straight Focus,' was a unique and innovative work of
music, reviewed by critics as 'the sound of a new technological
century' and 'a breakthrough piece at the intersection of brain science
and art.'
3. Besides being a critical success, 'Straight Focus' was a
multinational hit. It was viewed on video sharing sites over 350 million
times within a month of its release. But more indicative of its
popularity are the appreciation videos, remixes, and cover versions that
its fans have made.
4. Mr. Vail wrote 'Straight Focus' in memory of his daughter,
Sarah Vail, who passed away as a teenager due to complications of
leukemia last year. The piece is made up of fifty of Ms. Vail's favorite
musical works, which Mr. Vail arranged using his creativity and
experience in neurological science to produce an unexpectedly
emotional tour de force of sound. One of those works was the Plaintiff's
piece 'Taking It Back.'
5. The included portion of 'Taking It Back' in 'Straight Focus'
was minimal, and it has not diminished the value of the former piece.
Indeed, the popularity of Mr. Vail's composition has sparked
significant interest and increased sales in all of the source pieces.
Accordingly, Mr. Vail's use of a small portion of 'Taking It Back' is
not copyright infringement, or, at a minimum, is fair use under 17
U.S.C. § 107.
6. Furthermore, Plaintiff Whitman's proposed remedy of erasing
all memory of 'Straight Focus' from people's minds is unprecedented
and absurd. No court has ever ordered or authorized a total memory
erasure on the public in a copyright case, and it should not be ordered
or authorized here.
III.
Opinion of Benson, District Judge.
The trial jury found that Defendant Vail Enterprises had infringed
Plaintiff Whitman's copyright. Plaintiff now seeks from this Court an
order to compel Vail Enterprises to erase all memories of the
infringing song 'Straight Focus' from the minds of every person
residing in the United States, using the National MemSweep
system.
This is a highly unusual and unprecedented form of relief that
Whitman seeks, and so some background on the system is in
order.
The National MemSweep system developed out of the MemSweep
technology invented by Alfred Vail in 2028. Prior advances in
neuroscience had revealed that human memories could be altered or
erased by agitation of brain cells, but those procedures were
invasive and risky, accordingly only being used in particularly
unusual situations of mental illness such as post-traumatic stress
disorder.
Vail discovered that certain rapidly fluctuating low-frequency sound
waves could be used to perform the same brain cell agitation, thereby
allowing for erasure of memories safely, and noninvasively, and with a
great deal of precision as to time and subject matter of the memories.
The resulting technology, which he called MemSweep, was offered as a
consumer-level service, often to erase memories of embarrassing events,
ex-lovers, and traumatic situations.
The consumer service unexpectedly became a national security
defense, at the time of the August 2039 terrorist attacks on the United
States. The Central Intelligence Agency had intercepted an encrypted
communication detailing a plot for multiple simultaneous bombings on
several major cities. The CIA knew the attack would happen within a
week, but otherwise could not decrypt the messages to identify the
details of the plan. With time running out, the CIA in a last-ditch
effort procured thousands of large, high-fidelity speaker systems,
distributed them around cities, and loudly played MemSweep
recordings designed to erase memories of all conversations held during
the time of the intercepted messages.
The results were striking: San Francisco and Washington, D.C.,
where MemSweep was deployed, saw not a single bombing, while
New York City, where MemSweep was not deployed in time, was
devastated.
Following those attacks, the country moved quickly to deploy
MemSweep on a national scale. The resulting array, known as the
National MemSweep system, covers every square inch and every person
of the United States, and can ensure total erasure of an idea from the
populace. The system has been used infrequently but occasionally, and
under strict judicial supervision, to foil terrorist plots and avert crimes,
to great success, and the CIA and military have investigated
applications as well.
But the National MemSweep system has never been used to
vindicate a private party. It so far has only been activated to remove
ideas of crimes or public dangers. So Whitman's request to use
the system to remove memory of a song is truly unexpected.
This Court has not a single prior decision or precedent to stand
upon.
As an initial matter, an order for a party to use the National
MemSweep system would almost never be appropriate, since this
Court can only order a party to do something that the party can
do, and operating National MemSweep is not something that
most people can do. But Defendant here is an unusual exception,
because Vail Enterprises owns the system. The Alfred Vail who
invented MemSweep went on to found Vail Enterprises, which
financed and built National MemSweep, and continues to own it.
Thus, an order to use the system could actually be issued against
him.
Whitman contends that 17 U.S.C. § 503(b) permits this Court to
order Vail Enterprises to perform a memory erasure of the song.
That law says that this Court 'may order the destruction…of
all copies or phonorecords found to have been made or used in
violation of the copyright owner's exclusive rights.' Because
the neurons storing memories of the song constitute 'copies or
phonorecords,' Whitman argues, this Court has the power to order
Vail Enterprises to conduct the 'destruction' of such copies by erasing
memories.
I am sympathetic to Whitman's position. Whitman is clearly
very protective of his musical works, refusing to allow anyone
else to make derivative works or alterations of them, out of his
personal desire to ensure that his music remain 'untainted.' He is
allowed to do that, as copyright owner. I have already ordered
Vail Enterprises to destroy all physical copies of the infringing
song.
But it is unclear, in my view, whether ordering the destruction of
memories is a bridge too far. Perhaps it is; perhaps it is not — no other
court authority provides any guidance on this question. If a Court of
Appeals or the Supreme Court were to find such an order permissible,
then I would grant the order. But until I have support from a court
above, I find it necessary to err on the side of caution and not
to order Vail Enterprises to erase memories of the infringing
song.
Motion denied.
IV.
This morning, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in a closely
watched case over the ability of a songwriter to use his copyright power
to erase from the minds of all Americans a song deemed to infringe
that copyright.
The case, Whitman v. Vail Enterprises, pits songwriter Gene
Whitman against neuroscientist-turned-remix-artist Alfred Vail, over
the former hit song 'Straight Focus.' A jury in 2044 decided that Vail's
song infringed Whitman's copyright. Immediately afterwards, the
Recording Industry Association of America issued commands to the
Federal Digital Rights Management system, automatically deleting all
versions of the song from all online sites and personal computing
devices. 'Straight Focus' has not been heard in the United States for
over a year now.
But Whitman found the deletion of 'Straight Focus' from all
devices to be not enough. Intensely protective of his works, Whitman
sought a further order from the court for deletion of 'Straight Focus'
from all people's minds, using the National MemSweep system owned
by Vail.
The trial court refused Whitman's request, stating that it would not
order the use of National MemSweep without guidance from the
Supreme Court.
Whitman declined to comment on the case. Vail, in an interview,
expressed 'exasperation' that the case had even reached the Supreme
Court.
'My song 'Straight Focus' holds a lot of meaning to lots of people,'
he said. 'For me, it's a memory of my daughter, who I lost three years
ago. And fans of the song have created their own meanings and
memories from it. It boggles the mind why Gene Whitman can selfishly
wipe out all those thoughts with some sort of claim of copyright
ownership.'
This is the second recent case on the National MemSweep
system to reach the Supreme Court. The last case, United States
v. Neilson, tested the constitutionality of the system as used to
suppress criminal activity in the wake of the August 7, 2039
terrorist attacks. A sharply divided 5-4 decision affirmed the
system.
Writing for the majority, Chief Justice Diehr rejected challenges
under the First, Fifth, and Fourteenth Amendments, finding National
MemSweep to be 'a necessary tool of a technological society to prevent
wrongdoing and malfeasance against the public.' An air force veteran
and former Department of Justice prosecutor, the chief justice likely
drew from her years of experience serving in the United States
military when she concluded that 'the ever-increasing threats
to this nation can only be met with ever-increasingly effective
defenses.' Furthermore, she wrote, 'the duties of citizenship must
at least include the surrender of personal thoughts if to do so
would protect the greater good, just as one may be called to
surrender liberty or property in times of war for the good of the
nation.'
A strongly worded dissent by Justice Diamond dismissed
the idea that 'the human mind is the plaything of the federal
government.' Reflecting his background as a former civil rights lawyer,
the justice interpreted the Constitution and Bill of Rights to
include 'penumbras' of guarantees of privacy and freedom of
thought. These were strongly in conflict with non-consensual
memory erasure, in his view. He cited to the case Americans
for Digital Rights v. Gottschalk, which held that collection of
online data was an illegal search under the Fourth Amendment.
Twenty-five years ago, Justice Diamond was the attorney for ADR in
that case, which finally struck down pre-Internet caselaw that
had been seriously questioned by Justice Sotomayor back in
2012.
Justice Flook, who wrote a separate concurrence, indicated that he
was 'on the fence' due to the 'troubling implications' of widespread
memory erasure, but on the whole found that the benefits outweighed
those issues. He will likely cast the swing vote in the case, and all eyes
will be on him during the argument.
The justice is a former law professor, whose interests and writings
focused on environmental and natural resources law. Reflecting his
academic prowess and his environmentalist passion, the justice's
opinion in Neilson, like many of his others, is both analytically brilliant
and emotionally torn. 'I sincerely fear,' he wrote, 'a world where my
memories and the memories of countless others can be erased at
the flip of a switch. But I fear attacks of terrorists no less. So
long as I can be satisfied that memory erasure is limited to the
most necessary of situations, my first fear will remain sufficiently
contained.'
The argument will begin at 10:00 AM, and the case is Whitman
v. Alfred Vail Enterprises, No. 45-405.
V.
Chief Justice Diehr: We'll hear argument this morning in Case
45-405, Whitman versus Alfred Vail Enterprises.
Mr. Tilghman?
Mr. Tilghman: Madam Chief Justice, and may it please the
Court.
Today, we ask this Court to protect one of the oldest and most
important property rights established within this nation: the copyright
that protects the creative works of authors, artists, and — most relevant
to this case — musicians.
Section 106 of the Copyright Act guarantees to copyright
owners the exclusive right to make copies of their works, to make
derivative works based on the originals, and to distribute and
publicly perform those works, among other things. These rights
are —
Justice Diamond: Before we get too far into the copyright
weeds, Mr. Tilghman, can you explain to me why we should even be
considering this case? This is a case about erasing people's memories,
so I want to start out with why you think the National MemSweep
system is at all relevant outside the very narrow confines of terrorist
activity that we permitted in Neilson. I mean, we're talking about
suspending civil rights, about freedom of thought. Why should we even
be thinking about erasing people's memories anywhere outside the
context of terrorism?
Mr. Tilghman: Justice Diamond, though Neilson was itself a
case involving a terrorist act, its reasoning was not limited to
such situations. This Court's decision relied on general principles
of the Constitution, and it decided that erasure of memories
on a national scale was permissible when 'an unquestionable
interest of the American people is placed at imminent risk.'
The unquestionable interest in Neilson was the right to safety
from terrorism, but other important interests could fit the bill as
well.
Chief Justice Diehr: And, of course, there's the fact that an
illegal idea is contraband. You know, no one questions why it's illegal
to own illicit drugs, or weapons of mass destruction. An idea can be
just as destructive as either of those things. Doesn't it seem like the
government should have the power to confiscate dangerous ideas to
protect the people?
Mr. Tilghman: Indeed that's right, your Honor. Possession of
an illegal thought ought to be dealt with just like possession of an
illegal object. And an infringing copy of a copyrighted work is
contraband, as the Chief —
Justice Flook: Well — well — hmm. I can understand the
contraband argument as a general matter, but I'm worried about the
slippery slope. I concurred in Neilson but was concerned about what
overuse of National MemSweep could ultimately cause. Taken too far,
it could lead to censorship, government mind control, Nineteen
Eighty-Four totalitarianism. How can I be sure, Mr. Tilghman, that
what you are asking for in this case won't take us down that
path?
Mr. Tilghman: It's an excellent question, Justice Flook, but
luckily it has a straightforward answer. As I said previously, Neilson
held that an 'unquestionable interest of the American people'
could justify use of National MemSweep without triggering those
slippery slope concerns. And protection of copyright is that kind of
unquestionable interest, because copyright is a strong, absolute
right.
Chief Justice Diehr: Right, this is the argument from your
brief about Digital Rights Management.
Mr. Tilghman: That's correct.
DRM, of course, is the technology that ensures that copyrighted
works cannot be misused in ways that the copyright owners do not
want. That technology was once crude and rare, in the early days of
computer technology. In that world, perhaps I would have agreed with
you, Justice Flook: copyright was rarely enforced, and piracy was
rampant.
But the world shifted toward mobile devices around the turn of the
century, and those devices could be tracked, controlled, or even
disabled remotely. That opened the door to strong, effective DRM,
which was ultimately developed by an industry consortium and is now
included on every computer device sold today. That industry standard
DRM gives copyright owners total control over their works: power to
stop copying, power to control who views the work, power even to
delete data off of a device to protect against misuse. That is absolute
control.
Looking at it that way, what my client is asking for in this
case is not a particularly big step. He already has control over
every copy of his work stored in any electronic device. All he
wants now is control over copies of his work stored in people's
minds.
Justice Diamond: Wait — wait a second. You're completely
forgetting the rights on the other side. Don't consumers have rights to
make personal copies, or to play music among friends? There are all
sorts of things that are 'fair use' or otherwise allowed under
copyright law, as I recall. Making parodies, quoting for news
reporting, recording broadcasts to watch them later — these are all
considered fair use rights, and people are allowed to do them despite
copyright.
Mr. Tilghman: While it is true that those exceptions to
copyright still remain on the books, they have all been superseded by
the law surrounding DRM.
Justice Flook: So to be perfectly honest, Mr. Tilghman, I
didn't quite understand this argument in your brief. Section 1201 of the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which I'm assuming you're
talking about, that section says nothing about overriding fair use
and other exceptions that Justice Diamond mentioned. So how
do you reach the conclusion that Section 1201 supersedes such
things?
Mr. Tilghman: It's admittedly a tricky concept, your Honor,
and I apologize if I didn't explain it well in the briefs.
It is true that those exceptions to copyright, like fair use, still
remain on the books. But the applicability of those exceptions
is sharply limited by DRM and Section 1201. Modern DRM
ensures that protected works cannot be used in ways the author
does not desire, even if those uses might fall within one of those
exceptions. And Section 1201 made it illegal to get around the
DRM. So by operation of law and technology, it is illegal to
use a DRM-protected work outside of how the copyright holder
permits, regardless of any purported 'statutory exceptions' to
copyright.
Chief Justice Diehr: So, in other words, Congress made it
illegal to do whatever the DRM doesn't allow, even if the DRM is
blocking one of those copyright exceptions. And that means that
respecting the DRM is actually more important than those fair use
exceptions and such. Is that right?
Mr. Tilghman: Yes, that's exactly right. With Section 1201,
Congress decided that copyright owners' interests must come first,
when it comes to data on devices. No reason why data in minds should
be different.
Justice Diamond: That just seems absurd to me. This
law makes it illegal for people to exercise their rights like fair
use?
Mr. Tilghman: Perhaps it seems absurd to you that DRM
legally overrides fair use, but that has been long established as the law.
A case from 2001, Universal City Studios v. Corley, specifically said
that circumventing DRM was illegal under Section 1201, even if it was
done for fair use purposes. MDY Industries v. Blizzard Entertainment
from 2010 reached the same conclusion.
If these cases were wrong, then Congress has had four decades to
change the law. But there has been no such change. Section 1201
remains on the books just as it was enacted. This just goes to show
that copyright is a power of total control today. It is a very strong
right.
Justice Flook: So this is fascinating. I think I now understand
your argument for why copyright is a strong right. But let's step back a
minute.
This case is about erasing memories from citizens' minds. From all
the citizens' minds. Now I appreciate your argument that copyright is a
strong right, backed by DRM and laws like Section 1201. But I'm not
sure why I should make the jump from very strong right to this remedy
of memory erasure.
Obviously all this MemSweep law is very new, and we're still
figuring out how it works in all different areas of the law. But I want to
make sure this isn't like the power grabs I remember from the '20s and
'30s, when the big nuclear power companies tried to claim all sorts of
rights based on some pretty outlandish interpretations of environmental
laws. What legitimate need do copyright owners have for erasing
people's memories?
Mr. Tilghman: The legitimate need is the interest in total
control over one's copyrighted work. That interest in total control is
legitimized by the DRM and Section 1201 protections that enable such
control. Copyright law today gives owners total and complete power
over their protected property.
The power to control is the power to erase. Already modern DRM
systems allow copyright owners to delete infringements of those
copyrights from afar at the touch of a button. Physical copies of
infringements can be destroyed under Section 503(b) of the Copyright
Act. And ever since the U.S. International Trade Commission started
treating data transmissions the same as importation of goods in 2014,
it has been impounding and blocking Internet information on a
regular basis. There is no doubt that removal of information
from the public thought is a well-accepted remedy for copyright
infringement.
So why should it matter whether that information is removed from
a silicon drive or a human neuron? As Chief Justice Diehr explained
earlier, information that infringes copyright, like Mr. Vail's song
'Straight Focus,' is contraband wherever it might be stored. And
ultimately, all we ask for in this case is the modest proposal to apply
the same power over computer devices that DRM gives copyright
owners, to apply that power to human minds. If we can prevent tablets
from thinking infringing thoughts, why shouldn't we stop people from
using their heads to violate aptly-named intellectual property
rights?
The only reason that copyright infringements were allowed to
remain stored in people's minds is that we didn't have the technology
to remove illegal copies of memories. Today we have that technology.
So I urge the Court to take what is the next natural and reasonable
step in protecting copyright owners, to allow them to fully protect what
belongs to them.
Chief Justice Diehr: Thank you, Mr. Tilghman.
Ms. Proctor?
VI.
Ms. Proctor: Madam Chief Justice, and may it please the
Court.
For the almost three centuries that the United States of America
has been a nation, the inviolability of the mind has been a
central tenet. The pursuit of happiness — the pursuit of personal
thought — stands up there with life and liberty as an inalienable
right.
But that pursuit of happiness is fundamentally what is being
questioned in this Court today. For Petitioner seeks to violate the
fundamental right to freedom of thoughts, to maintenance of ideas, to
pursuit of happiness — he seeks to violate these in order to vindicate his
desire for protection of intellectual property.
Certainly freedom of thought is not absolute, as this Court
recognized in Neilson. But like freedom of speech, or the rights to due
process or equal protection, it is a fundamental right that may be
breached only when there is a compelling interest on the other side — an
interest like terrorism or national security.
Copyright is no such compelling interest. It does not put the
security or protection of the whole nation at stake; it is merely a
financial interest of a single person.
Chief Justice Diehr: Well, the interest of a single person can
certainly be compelling if that interest is strong enough, can it not?
The interest in protecting a person from violent crime, or a person's
fundamental right to equal protection under the law, those are certainly
compelling interests. And if, as Mr. Tilghman suggested, copyright is
such a strong, absolute right, why shouldn't it fall within that
same category of compelling interests deserving of the utmost
protection?
Ms. Proctor: Well that's just it, your Honor. Copyright is not
nearly as absolute as Mr. Tilghman would have us believe. The most
well-known exception to the absoluteness of copyright is the doctrine of
fair use, by which one may perform an act that looks just like
infringement of copyright, but bear no liability or responsibility for
infringement, because the performed act is deemed a fair and
acceptable use.
Chief Justice Diehr: Mr. Tilghman just argued that fair use
has basically been trumped by DRM and Section 1201. What's your
response to that?
Ms. Proctor: Maybe he's right as a practical matter, but the
annihilation of fair use is not something that this Court should
propagate or endorse. Doctrines like fair use are critical to the
continued ability of artists and creators to do their work. All art builds
upon the successes and inspirations of the past. Just as this Court cites
prior cases in writing new opinions, a novel will quote or allude
to older works; a painting will use the techniques of the great
masters; a musician will borrow ideas from various genres and
songs.
So even if DRM and Section 1201 have diminished the doctrine of
fair use on electronic devices, this Court should not further diminish it
by declaring copyright a totally absolute right. And that is why use of
National MemSweep simply cannot be appropriate. That system is
reserved for situations of absolutes: absolute rights for which there is no
redeeming value on the other side.
Justice Diamond: The numerous state laws regulating the
overall use of MemSweep technology, those laws would confirm your
view that National MemSweep must be reserved for uses of absolute
importance, right?
Ms. Proctor: They certainly would, your Honor. When
MemSweep was first made popular years ago, states immediately acted
to regulate the industry out of concern that the technology could be
abused. Today, every one of the fifty-two states has laws that license
MemSweep operators, restrict use of memory erasure operations to a
small set of appropriate situations, impose waiting periods on those
wishing to use it, require substantial verification of informed
consent —
Chief Justice Diehr: And all of those laws are inapplicable
here. As I'm sure you know, the National Security Act of 2040
preempted those state laws and allowed for National MemSweep to be
used 'to protect any national interest or right,' to quote the
language of the law. So enforcement of a right created by the
U.S. government — oh, say, copyright — is explicitly permitted
even in the face of those individual state laws you bring up,
right?
Ms. Proctor: Your Honor, the National Security Act was
enacted only five months after the August 2039 terrorist attacks, and it
seems obvious that the act was intended specifically to deal with
terrorism and national security. So maybe the text of the act
suggests that the act overrides all those protective state laws
when it comes to enforcing copyrights. But in the context of the
passage of the National Security Act, that's a real stretch of
interpretation.
Justice Flook: It seems to me, counsel, that what you're
pointing to is that larger problem of a slippery slope, which we
discussed with Mr. Tilghman. If copyright is not as strong an interest
as national security, then allowing the National MemSweep system to
be used for copyright enforcement might open the door to all sorts of
other unintended uses of the system.
Ms. Proctor: That's exactly my concern, your Honor. Abuses
of memory erasure — abuses of wholesale national memory erasure — are
easy to imagine. A political party in power could use it to weaken the
beliefs of the opposing party. Big companies could use it for corporate
sabotage. Erasing memories could become the tool of oppression, of
ostracism, of —
Chief Justice Diehr: Well it seems to me that there are plenty
of other situations where it would be appropriate to use the
system. What about leaks of classified information? Shouldn't the
government be able to use National MemSweep for preventing
leaks?
Ms. Proctor: Leaks of classified information are still issues of
national security, so they are essentially no different from prevention of
terrorism. So even if using National MemSweep to prevent those leaks
is appropriate, that says nothing about using National MemSweep for
copyright infringement.
Chief Justice Diehr: OK, in that case let's consider a copyright
example. Say that you have a situation like the old copyright case
Harper & Row v. Nation Enterprises, where a magazine gets its hands
on a book before publication, and 'scoops' the book by printing the
best parts in advance. That kills the market for the book and is
totally contrary to the exclusive right to control distribution of
one's work that copyright entails. The only true remedy for the
copyright owner is to erase memory of the scoop, so that the book
can be sold and read anew. Isn't that an appropriate use as
well?
Ms. Proctor: No, your Honor —
Justice Flook: Huh.
Ms. Proctor: I'm sorry?
Justice Flook: Well — hmm. It's interesting, that point that
Chief Justice Diehr raises. I knew of the Harper & Row case but
hadn't thought of it that way.
It reminds me of something that happened to me years ago, when I
was still a student in law school. I had been working on a research
project on local plastic shopping bag laws, back in 2012. I spent
months digging through municipal law records, calling up city
councils — even had to visit one town that still only kept the laws in
paper books.
Finally, I'd gotten all the data I needed, and was starting to write
my paper on it. And I knew that this was going to be a big one, at
least for a third-year law student with barely a law review note to his
name. But I mentioned the results to a professor of mine at
the time, and he repeated the main conclusion during a press
interview. That of course spread across all the news sites within
days.
I suppose I should have been happy that the facts were out there.
But when it came time to send out my paper for publication two
months later, of course no one was interested. The paper was
ultimately thrown out, along with the half a year I'd dedicated to
it.
Obviously I managed to produce other successful work —
Justice Diamond: I think you did pretty well for yourself,
Justice Flook.
(Laughter.)
Justice Flook: Well, being on the bench with you, it can't be all
bad.
(Laughter.)
But I suppose what I take from that incident is — well, having
control over your own work is pretty important. I lost control
over my research. But now technology can help with that. We
have DRM that gives copyright holders control over their work
on devices. Maybe that was controversial once, but everyone
accepts that today, considering that the Section 1201 law remains
unchanged. Why shouldn't we have control over our works in the
minds of others? That's all that Mr. Whitman is asking for,
right? A sort of do-over, to pluck out the mistaken, infringing
information that never should have been let loose in the first
place.
Chief Justice Diehr: Something like, maybe, cleaning the
environment of a pollutant? That would be analogous.
Justice Flook: Hmm — yes — maybe that's it. Maybe that's what
I was looking for when I was asking whether memory erasure
is the right remedy here. Like scrubbing the air of chemicals,
perhaps we're scrubbing minds of information that doesn't belong
there.
Ms. Proctor: I — I see that my time has expired, would —
Chief Justice Diehr: The Court will indulge you a minute or
two for a response.
Ms. Proctor: Thank you, your Honor. To answer your question,
Justice Flook, we're not just scrubbing minds of a small piece of
information. We're scrubbing a whole lot more.
When I talked to my client, Mr. Vail, about the importance of his
song, he explained that it was intimately tied to the memory of his
daughter, Sarah Vail. 'Straight Focus' is made up of her favorite songs,
he said, and so his memory of that song is his memory of her. The song
also uses the neurological techniques he invented, working as a carefully
orchestrated whole to trigger memories of Sarah in his mind. In a very
real sense, it is this song that keeps Mr. Vail's daughter alive. To take
away his memory of that song would be to take a piece of her away
from him.
This deplorable result is only writ larger for all the fans of the
song. Fans have enjoyed the piece and built their own memories
around it. Artists have built upon and improved the song with
their personal tastes and creativity through remixes and cover
versions.
Shall we give up all of this creation, all of this progress, all of this
thought and happiness, on the unilateral request of one songwriter?
The Constitution of the United States says that copyright law
must 'promote the progress of science and the useful arts.' But
the memory erasure that Mr. Whitman seeks would eliminate
not only the infringing song — which was a work of progress in
itself — but also all the progress made based upon it. Erasure
is regress, not progress, and this Court should not authorize
it.
Chief Justice Diehr: Thank you, Ms. Proctor. The case is
submitted.
VII.
But civil liberties advocates disagreed. 'A person's right to freedom
of thought ought to trump a commercial copyright interest,' read a
letter signed by twenty nonprofit organizations this morning, asking
Congress to overturn the decision.
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